When: 5:00 PM EST / 7:00 AM JST (August 9)
As we enter the fourth of Nuclear Prayer Days, we arrive at the culmination of a shared journey. Together we have remembered the victims of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, honored the voices of a new generation, and reflected upon the lessons and unfinished stories of the Atomic Age. Today we turn our attention to the future and ask one of the defining questions of our time:
How do we create a world free of nuclear weapons?
The answer begins with an understanding that the future is not something that simply happens to us. It is something we create together through the choices we make, the values we embrace, and the courage we demonstrate. Nuclear weapons did not emerge as an inevitable consequence of history; they were created through human decisions. In the same way, a world free of nuclear weapons will also be created through human decisions—guided not by fear, but by wisdom, cooperation, justice, and compassion.
This day is dedicated to exploring that possibility.
Throughout the program we will hear from diplomats, educators, scientists, military leaders, faith communities, artists, youth advocates, and peacebuilders who have devoted their lives to reducing the threat of nuclear war. Their stories remind us that the abolition of nuclear weapons is not merely a political objective. It is a humanitarian imperative, a moral commitment, and a shared responsibility that belongs to every generation.
The lessons of Hiroshima and Nagasaki continue to speak with remarkable clarity. They remind us that technological achievement must always be guided by ethical wisdom. They remind us that lasting security cannot be built upon the permanent threat of mutual destruction. They remind us that every human life possesses inherent dignity, regardless of nationality, race, religion, or political identity. Above all, they remind us that reconciliation is possible, even after unimaginable suffering, and that hope is sustained not by wishful thinking but by courageous action.
Creating a world free of nuclear weapons begins long before treaties are signed or stockpiles are dismantled. It begins in our homes, our schools, our places of worship, our communities, and our institutions. It begins whenever we choose dialogue over division, understanding over suspicion, cooperation over hostility, and compassion over fear. Every act that strengthens trust between people helps build the foundation upon which lasting peace depends.
We will explore practical pathways toward that future. We will learn about international efforts to reduce nuclear dangers, hear from organizations advancing disarmament, and discover how cities, schools, universities, faith communities, and grassroots organizations are helping cultivate a culture of peace. We will also hear from young leaders whose vision and determination remind us that the next generation is not waiting to inherit the future—they are already helping to shape it.
Just as importantly, this day invites each of us to reflect on our own role in creating a more peaceful world. Together we will ask:
- What kind of world do we hope to leave our children and grandchildren?
- How do we transform fear into trust?
- How do we strengthen diplomacy before conflict becomes crisis?
- How do we educate future generations not only about the dangers of nuclear weapons but also about the practices of dialogue, empathy, cooperation, and global citizenship?
- How can each of us become a builder of peace within our own sphere of influence?
These are not questions reserved for presidents, diplomats, or military leaders. They belong to all of us. Every citizen has the capacity to influence the culture in which future decisions will be made.
As this final day draws to a close, we will gather for a Commitment Ceremony. Having remembered, reflected, learned, and prayed together, we will be invited to move from intention to action. Participants will be asked to make a personal commitment—whether through education, advocacy, dialogue, community engagement, artistic expression, public service, or simple daily acts of compassion—to help build a world where nuclear weapons no longer threaten humanity. In this shared act of commitment, we affirm that the work of peace belongs not only to governments but to every one of us.
We will conclude, as we have each day, with the Nuclear Prayer. Offered once more as a covenant for the future, it becomes both our blessing and our promise. We pray for the wisdom to transform memory into action, fear into courage, division into reconciliation, and hope into enduring peace.
